![]() In spite of their struggles and the fact that Dwight has disappeared into his "Second Life" gaming world, the rest of the office manages to pull together a genuinely entertaining bit of cinema - even if it doesn't ever go further than the four walls of Poor Richard's pub. Among other things, Pam offers to create a nifty animated logo, Darryl's team fails to make a suitable jingle, and Phyllis falls flat trying to get Sue Grafton to guest star in the spot. Scott personally takes on the production of the entire project. The episode starts with Michael dismissing the creatively restrictive contractors who originally arrive to shoot the clip. Jan then listens to his voicemail and storms out of the office. Their boss eventually off-roads entirely by breaking up with Jan over voicemail - only to have her stroll into the office moments later to apologize in person for a previous argument. The episode ends with Pam and Karen having a showdown over their women's intuition by giving Michael conflicting relationship advice. ![]() Meanwhile, Dwight heads up the hunt for the flasher and the rest of the testosterone-ridden crew pay a curious visit to the decked-out women's room. To top it all off, he buys them all lingerie, because of course he would do that. There he encourages them to "dish" but ends up telling them about his own relationship with Jan. He puts on an impromptu women's appreciation seminar, which eventually devolves into the manager taking the group to the mall. When he realizes that he's massively overstepped, the dunderhead flips on a dime - and not in a good way either. UPDATE (7/28/23): List updated to reflect the latest scores.When Phyllis is flashed on the way into the building, Michael initially responds in a cruelly mocking manner, even going so far as to ask the implicative question of why Phyllis, of all the women in the office, was the one flashed. ![]() In case of ties in which the Tomatometer scores and number reviews are the same, the episodes are listed in alphabetical order.ĭon’t like the ranking? Sound off in the comments. ![]() We’ve updated the list to reflect the current Tomatometer score however, it’s worth noting that early episodes like “The National Anthem” and “15 Million Merits” have scores of 100% on fewer than 20 reviews, while more recent episodes, may not have perfect scores, but have more reviews - season 4’s first episode “USS Callister,” for example, scores in the mid 90s, but on 38 reviews. With Netflix unleashing a new chapter of this paranoia-fueled scarefest in June, Rotten Tomatoes has crunched the numbers to rank the best Black Mirror episodes down to the worst. (That all of these episodes are available to be played on Netflix, the streaming giant known for obsessively monitoring our usage without really sharing what they find, is not lost on the creator see the season 6 episodes “Joan Is Awful” and “Loch Henry.”) It’s arguable that creator Charlie Brooker’s episodic anthology series Black Mirror is one of the scariest shows on TV - not because it relies on zombie attacks or murderous clowns, but because it shows just how easily phones, computers, and other advancing technology that we are increasingly dependent on can be used against us if we’re not paying close enough attention. ![]()
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